Not to be outdone by the October blood moon, the sun put on its best Halloween face and imitated a jack-o'-lantern on October 8. The brighter regions—its eyes and mouth, so to speak—appear as such due to magnetic fields in the corona (the sun's atmosphere) that cause the release of more energy. Read more
October 2014 blood moon & jack-o'-lantern sun
Cortney Science & Technology + blood moon, lunar eclipse, orbits, sun
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Easy Science: Milankovitch cycles and climate
Cortney Science & Technology + climate change, Easy Science, ice ages, milankovitch cycles, orbits
Milankovitch cycles essentially describe earth's relationship with the sun based on eccentricity, obliquity, and precession. Each of these three components operates on a different timescale, but when they overlap in just the right way, they can reduce insolation (the sunlight hitting the earth) and lower temperatures; conversely, when they work to increase insolation, temperatures go up. For more information on how these cycles influence climate, visit NASA, Skeptical Science, or Wikipedia. Read more →